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A shimmering sonic showplace in Philadelphia;
After a series of embarrassing setbacks, Verizon Hall is tuned
by Mark Swed / The Los Angeles Times (Mar
8, 2003)
The Vienna Philharmonic came to Philadelphia
on Wednesday night for the first time in 36 years. Although the
band, perhaps the world's most elite orchestra, appears in nearby
New York annually and has even debarked in far-off Costa Mesa twice
in the last four years, it has steered clear of Philadelphia for
the simple reason that, like the city's own exceptional orchestra,
it hated playing in the acoustically dead Academy of Music.
But now there's Verizon Hall, the largest of
the two venues in the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. Still,
considering all the bad press this concert hall has received, the
Viennese may well have felt as much trepidation Wednesday night
as did a listener whose only experience with it came at its opening
in December 2001.
At that well-publicized disaster, the acoustical
work was far from finished. The hall was freezing cold -- several
shivering women, in sleeveless gowns, gave up their $5,000 seats
when word got out that a ladies' room in the basement had heat.
But at least that meant that the patron whose chair collapsed during
the performance could find a free seat. Through it all it, the center's
administration looked embarrassingly provincial.
Then, three months ago, as Kimmel approached
its first anniversary, real disaster struck. During a Philadelphia
Orchestra rehearsal, the automated sprinkler system malfunctioned,
drenching the orchestra and its valuable -- in some cases, irreplaceable
-- instruments.
Returning to the Kimmel Center to hear the Vienna
Philharmonic on Wednesday night and the Philadelphia Orchestra on
Thursday, I found Raphael Vinoly's handsome building looked the
same as it did on opening night, but behind the scenes, a great
deal has changed.
By far the most important improvement has been
an exceptional acoustical transformation. Verizon initially displayed
the Philadelphia Orchestra in such a harsh and glaring way that
the ensemble's famously luscious sound at times approached outright
ugliness.
For an Angeleno that was especially worrisome,
because Verizon's acoustics are the work of Russell Johnson, who
will handle the sound for the new concert hall at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center. The groundbreaking was last month; construction
is expected to be completed in 2006.
But Verizon ideally captured every ghostlike
wisp of sound in Gidon Kremer's ethereal performance of Berg's Violin
Concerto with the Vienna Philharmonic. Sitting in the first tier,
I felt as though that violin was hovering magically in the air all
around me. Nikolaus Harnoncourt's measured conducting obsessively
observed every orchestral detail, and here, too, nothing came between
the beautiful sounds these musicians made and my ears. When a high
gong or triangle was struck very softly, its golden shimmer gave
me goose bumps.
The next night, hearing the Philadelphia Orchestra
conducted by Christoph Eschenbach(who becomes its music director
next season) brought a whole new set of acoustical revelations.
The hall's tightly focused sound loses bloom at the orchestra's
loud, massed climaxes. But it captured the richness of the strings
in Schoenberg's orchestration of Brahms' Piano Quartet No. 1 in
G Minor. The brass sounded smooth and thick as honey. And the percussion
made an impressive impact.
What happened? Johnson, an advocate of adjustable acoustics, rimmed
Verizon Hall with sound chambers that can be opened and closed at
will. The canopy above the stage is also movable. But construction
of the Kimmel Center was so far behind schedule that none of this
technology was in place the first night the Philadelphia orchestra
played in the hall.
And even months later, when the work was finally
finished, the tuning had just begun. Week in and week out for the
rest of the season, Johnson experimented with different settings,
opening and closing the 100 doors to the sound chambers, raising
and lowering the canopy. He worked with Simon Woods, the head of
artistic planning for the orchestra. Both have long experience with
this. Johnson has many admired halls to his credit, including ones
in Dallas; Birmingham, England; and Lucerne, Switzerland. Woods
is a former CD producer who recorded in Birmingham when Johnson's
hall opened there 13 years ago.
By last summer, Woods says, Verizon was "good
but not there." Over the summer, $3 million in extra work was
done to the $265- million Kimmel Center, including -- finally --
varnishing the stage and building risers. That was what turned the
sonic corner, according to Woods. He says that the hall's transparency
is so attractive some find it preferable to the warmer, but fuzzier,
Carnegie Hall in New York. Hearing the Philadelphia Orchestra earlier
in the week in Carnegie under Eschenbach (in a different program),
I found myself, if not fully agreeing with that assessment, at least
finding value in both points of view.
The Kimmel Center has also turned an administrative
corner. When it opened, displaying minimal vision as it haphazardly
booked low rent acts, the hall's administrators did little to spotlight
the Philadelphia Orchestra. But finally, in the form of a plaque,
Verizon Hall has been dubbed the orchestra's official home.
This was one of the first acts of former Lincoln
Center administrator Janice Price, hired last year to run the facility.
Her programming is a sophisticated mix of world music, jazz and
classical music, and she has also coped with the recalcitrant sprinklers
and air conditioning.
The deluge, she says, was a computer problem
that is still being investigated. Newly stringent fire laws mandated
a system that doesn't just shower the hall but floods it. Price
says the good side of that catastrophe is that it may prevent other
halls from adopting similar technology. Although time will tell
whether the wood in Verizon will warp or buckle, the orchestra was
lucky; the only instrument ruined was a grand piano.
The air conditioning is under control, as well,
and the Kimmel Center seems a success. It reaches a wide audience,
about a quarter of which is non-white and nearly half of which are
attending arts events for the first time. David Patrick Stearns,
a music critic for the Philadelphia Inquirer, said the hall passes
his test: "It doesn't get in the way of the music."
Will there be more adjustments? Woods says the
orchestra has found the setting it likes, although Eschenbach may
fine tune it when he becomes music director.
And OCPAC can breath a little easier. Or can
it? Woods points out that the transparency of sound in Verizon is
"absolutely merciless." Great ensembles sound wonderful,
but lesser ones are cruelly exposed. The Pacific Symphony, which
will be resident in the new hall, is hardly on the level of the
Philadelphia Orchestra. Nor does it play nearly as many concerts
as the Philadelphians do, so the adjustment process could be painfully
slow.
But Woods also points out that the new hall in
Orange County could be an agent in the orchestra's growth. The City
of Birmingham Symphony, he says, "was very much better in 1995
than it was in 1985."
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